Tag “too big to fail”

Bail! Bail! Bail!

I think you know by now that I am strenuously opposed to all of the bailouts that the federal government has been throwing at the various flailing tentacles of the dying capitalist monster. While I can see some rationalization for injecting cash into the financial sector to revive liquidity, I see absolutely no good reason for the government to literaly flush money down the toilet by giving it to the “Big Three” car makers. The “too big to fail” argument only underscores how over-dependent our country is on automobiles and auto manufacturing and just how badly we need to let that industry die so that other forms of transportation can find their way to the market.

In his weekly strip for Salon, cartoonist Keith Knight points his sharp black marker at a much better idea than a government bailout: Let the oil companies, with their massive windfall profits, bail out the car manufacturers. After all, that’s a symbiotic relationship in the first place. Then, take all that money that would have gone into Detroit’s ripped pockets and invest in rail services, public transportation systems that decrease suburban dependence on automobiles, and anything else that helps to bring down the curtain once and for all on the Automotive Era.

“Jonco” from “Bits & Pieces” offers this alternative to having the government pay for all the bailouts:

1 . At Wal-Mart, Americans spend $36,000,000 every hour of every day.

2 . This works out to $20,928 profit. Every minute!

3. Wal-Mart will sell more from January 1 to St. Patrick’s Day (March 17th) than Target sells all year.

4. Wal-Mart is bigger than Home Depot + Kroger + Target + Sears + Costco + K-Mart combined.

5. Wal-Mart employs 1.6 million people and is the largest private employer. And most can’t speak English

6. Wal-Mart is the largest company in the history of the world.

7. Wal-Mart now sells more food than Kroger & Safeway combined, and keep in mind they did this in only 15 years.

8. During this same period, 31 supermarket chains sought bankruptcy (including Winn-Dixie).

9. Wal-Mart now sells more food than any other store in the world.

10. Wal-Mart has approx 3,900 stores in the USA of which 1,906 are SuperCenters; This is 1,000 more than it had 5 years ago.

11. This year, 7.2 billion different purchasing experiences will occur at a Wal-Mart store.
(Earth’s population is approximately 6.5 billion.)

12. 90% of all Americans live within 15 miles of a Wal-Mart.

13. Let Wal Mart bail out Wall Street

Just to put the various bailouts into historical perspective, this blog has run the numbers and says that the total cost of all the bailouts, loans, and other federal interventions to date (including the proposed bailout for Citibank) comes to $4.6 trillion dollars. That is more money than we spent on the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Apollo Program, the Marshall Plan, the New Deal, the Louisiana Purchase, the Iraq Invasion, the Savings-and-Loan Bailout, AND the budget for NASA for the last 50 years COMBINED. Even the entire cost of the Second World War (in adjusted dollars) was “only” $3.6 trillion.

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Capitalism Destroys Everything, Chapter #3549

Hey, whaddayaknow? Those financial wizards at AIG have asked for MORE money so they do things like blow a third of a million dollars on yet ANOTHER weekend resort getaway for their bigwigs. That’s almost a buck and a half for every American who filed for unemployment in October. And now we have to bail out the auto industry for their inability to adapt to economic reality, too! They’re TOO BIG TO FAIL!!

Sheesh.

Well, if there’s anyone left who wants to quibble with my motto, “Capitalism Destroys Everything”, I’ll pause for a show of hands.

Thought so.

Here’s an article from a website that focuses on issues related to “Peak Oil” called Energy Bulletin from a fellow named Jerry Silberman. He says our present economic crisis may well be “The Last Recession” ever, because capitalism has blown itself out for good. A quick pull quote:

One thing that may make this transition easier is that, whether we like it or not, this is the final recession of this system. Along with the peak of oil production, now visible in our rear view mirror, capitalist expansion is done. The slope down will not be uniform, there will be upticks along the way, and regional variations, but the peak is past. There is only one way to go, and it’s down.

Now, say what you will about the Peak Oil gloom-and-doomsayers, but he makes several very good points about diminishing resources across the board (not just petroleum) as disincentives to invest, causing a spiral effect. But his second point is that even though the model of ever-more-profitable-at-any-cost capitalism has reached its conclusion, it may be possible to use this opportunity for a model of sustainability, where growth is not always the most desirable outcome:

Shift our values to a sustainable model, where growth is not a primary goal or an unqualified good. Let’s make our “investment” decisions based on what will be sufficient to meet our human needs for physical security, social justice, and cultural enrichment. Central to this model is the determination that all our strategies, and the goals we seek, must be within the limits of our resources such that projected over the uncountable generations, they must not deprive us of the ability to sufficiently meet our basic human needs. As outlined above, the principles and practices of capitalism cannot deliver this kind of model.

All the bullshit from the Republicans about Barack Obama being a “socialist” or a “Marxist” notwithstanding, Obama does have the opportunity to sow some of the seeds that need to be planted now to make this transition out of mass capitalism manageable, and his stated intentions with regard to energy policy and national infrastructure are on the right track, but throwing trillions of dollars at industries that have destroyed themselves with absolutely no guarantee that said bailouts will have any positive effect except to allow big executive bonuses and spa weekends is getting off on the wrong foot.

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